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But on the other hand, its actions haven't been exactly consistent with its public views, and it has the rather odd habit of implementing fan-made assets in its own official products and works. It can be argued, though, that Nintendo is more concerned with third-party distributors profiting off of its intellectual property than it is about quashing the fanbase's creativity, considering that a few fan-made titles are hosted by their own creators for free, and are completely legally playable. Nintendo's views on fan-made assets has been historically somewhat murky - on the one hand, it's verbally and publicly decried any fan-made content, resulting in the removal of hundreds, if not thousands, of games, assets, and mods concocted by the fanbase that still continues to support them.
Wii has popped up at Super Nintendo World, flower and all. It's strange in that this keeps happening to a company who wields the DACA against fan-made mods and assets without restraint, but in a way it's also somewhat unsurprising. Nintendoseems to be continuing a rather strange tradition in using fan mods in its own official works, as a cactus design from the fan-made Newer Super Mario Bros.